Estrogen Receptor Alpha Represses Transcription of Early Target Genes via p300 and CtBP1
Author(s) -
Fabio Stossi,
Zeynep MadakErdogan,
Benita S. Katzenellenbogen
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.01476-08
Subject(s) - biology , estrogen receptor alpha , psychological repression , corepressor , gene knockdown , estrogen receptor , transcription factor , estrogen receptor beta , transcriptional regulation , regulation of gene expression , transcription (linguistics) , chromatin , promoter , nuclear receptor , gene , microbiology and biotechnology , cancer research , gene expression , genetics , breast cancer , cancer , linguistics , philosophy
The regulation of gene expression by nuclear receptors controls the phenotypic properties and diverse biologies of target cells. In breast cancer cells, estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) is a master regulator of transcriptional stimulation and repression, yet the mechanisms by which agonist-bound ERalpha elicits repression are poorly understood. We analyzed early estrogen-repressed genes and found that ERalpha is recruited to ERalpha binding sites of these genes, albeit more transiently and less efficiently than for estrogen-stimulated genes. Of multiple cofactors studied, only p300 was recruited to ERalpha binding sites of repressed genes, and its knockdown prevented estrogen-mediated gene repression. Because p300 is involved in transcription initiation, we tested whether ERalpha might be trying to stimulate transcription at repressed genes, with ultimately failure and a shift to a repressive program. We found that estrogen increases transcription in a rapid but transient manner at early estrogen-repressed genes but that this is followed by recruitment of the corepressor CtBP1, a p300-interacting partner that plays an essential role in the repressive process. Thus, at early estrogen-repressed genes, ERalpha initiates transient stimulation of transcription but fails to maintain the transcriptional process observed at estrogen-stimulated genes; rather, it uses p300 to recruit CtBP1-containing complexes, eliciting chromatin modifications that lead to transcriptional repression.
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